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. 2006 Feb 16;63(5):627. doi: 10.1007/s00018-005-5548-7

The translocation motif of hepatitis B virus improves protein vaccination

E Bleifuss 1,7,, T Kammertoens 2, A Hutloff 1, D Quarcoo 3, M Dorner 1, P Straub 2, W Uckert 4, E Hildt 1,5,6
PMCID: PMC11136241  PMID: 16482397

Abstract.

Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) have been shown to improve antigen loading of dendritic cell vaccines. Here we asked whether fusion of a CPP to a protein improves its immunogenicity when this fusion protein is directly applied as vaccine. We used the cell-penetrating translocation motif (TLM) derived from the hepatitis B virus, because no size limitation of cargos has been observed. Increased immunogenicity was observed when TLM was fused to ovalbumin (TLM-ova). TLM-ova was found to be superior to ova in inducing proliferation and cytotoxicity of ova-specific CD8+ T cells in vitro and in vivo. Using ovalbumin-expressing thymoma cells (EG7-ova), an improved anti-tumor immune response was observed for TLM-ova vaccination versus vaccination with ova. Moreover, TLM-ova vaccination induced a higher titer of anti-ovalbumin IgG2a antibodies compared to ova. These data demonstrate that CPP-protein vaccines can improve cellular as well as humoral immune responses.

Key words. Cell penetrating peptide, translocation motif of hepatitis B virus, tumor immunity, ovalbumin, protein vaccination

Footnotes

Received 16 November 2005; received after revision 12 December 2005; accepted 10 January 2006

†These authors contributed equally to this work


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